At the moment, there are relatively few Lisp packages available in the Arch repositories. This means that at some point or another, more will likely appear. It is useful, therefore, to figure out now, while there are few packages, how they should be packaged.

Contents

Directory structure and naming

There is at least one package in the base repository (libgpg-error)
that includes lisp files, which are placed in
/usr/share/common-lisp/source/gpg-error. In keeping with this,
other lisp packages should also place their files in
/usr/share/common-lisp/source/pkgname.

The package directory should be the name of the lisp package, not what it's called in the Arch repository (or AUR). This applies even to single-file packages.

For example, a Lisp package called "cl-ppcre" should be called cl-ppcre in AUR and reside in /usr/share/common-lisp/source/cl-ppcre.
A Lisp package called "alexandria" should be called cl-alexandria in AUR and reside in /usr/share/common-lisp/source/alexandria.

ASDF

Try to avoid the usage of ASDF-Install as a means of installing these system-wide packages.

ASDF itself may be necessary or helpful as a means of compiling and/or loading packages. In that case, it is suggested that the directory used for the central registry (the location of all of the symlinks to *.asd) be /usr/share/common-lisp/systems/.

However, I have observed problems with doing the compilation with asdf as a part of the package compilation process. However, it does work during an install, through use of a package.install file. Such a file might look like this:

...where $_lispdir is $pkgdir/usr/share/common-lisp. By linking to a relative, rather than an absolute, path, it's possible to guarantee that the link will not break post-install.

Lisp-specific packaging

When possible, do not make packages specific to a single lisp implementation; try to be as cross-platform as the package itself will allow. If, however, the package is specifically designed for a single lisp implementation (i.e., the developers haven't gotten around to adding support for others yet, or the package's purpose is specifically to provide a capability that is built in to another lisp implementation), it is appropriate to make your Arch package lisp-specific.

To avoid making packages implementation-specific, ideally all implementation packages (SBCL, cmucl, clisp) would be built with the PKGBUILD field common-lisp. However, that's not the case (and that would likely cause problems for people who prefer to have multiple lisps at their fingertips). In the meantime, you could (a) not make your package depend on *any* lisp and include a statement in the package.install file telling folks to make sure they have a lisp
installed (not ideal), or (b) Take direction from the sbcl PKGBUILD and include a conditional statement to figure out which lisp
is needed (which is hackish and, again, far from ideal). Other ideas are welcome.

Also note that if ASDF is needed to install/compile/load the package, things could potentially get awkward as far as dependencies go, since SBCL comes with asdf installed, clisp does not but there is an AUR package, and CMUCL may or may not have it (the author of this doc. knows next to nothing about CMUCL; sorry).

People currently maintaining lisp-specific packages that do not need to be lisp-specific should consider doing at least one of the following:

Editing their PKGBUILDs to be cross-platform, provided someone else is not already maintaining the same package for a different lisp.

Offering to take over maintenance or help with maintenance of the same package for a different lisp, and then combining them into a single package.

Offering up their package to the maintainer of a different lisp's version of the same package, so as to allow that person to combine them into a single package.

(Note that joyfulgirl, the author of this doc., currently maintains clisp versions of cl-ppcre and of stumpwm; she is open to either
giving up the packages to the maintainers of the SBCL versions or to maintain the new, cross-platform versions herself if the SBCL-version maintainers do not want to).

Things you, the reader, can do

Maintain lisp packages following these guidelines

Update and fix problems with these guidelines

Keep up with what's changed here

Provide (polite) thoughts, feedback, and suggestions both on this document and to people's work.